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81 wood
[wud]1) (( also adjective) (of) the material of which the trunk and branches of trees are composed: My desk is (made of) wood; She gathered some wood for the fire; I like the smell of a wood fire.) madeira2) ((often in plural) a group of growing trees: They went for a walk in the woods.) bosque3) (a golf-club whose head is made of wood.) taco de golfe•- wooded- wooden
- woody
- wood carving
- woodcut
- woodcutter
- woodland
- woodlouse
- woodpecker
- wood pulp
- woodwind
- woodwork
- woodworm
- out of the woods
- out of the wood* * *[wud] n 1 madeira, lenha. 2 floresta, selva, bosque, mato (também woods). 3 objeto de madeira. 4 tina, barrica, barril. 5 Mus instrumento de sopro de madeira. 6 woods Mus instrumentos de sopro de madeira de uma orquestra. • vt+vi 1 prover ou abastecer com madeira ou lenha. 2 reflorestar, plantar árvores. • adj 1 de madeira. 2 do mato. a clearing in the wood uma clareira na floresta. he is out of the wood ele está fora de perigo. to cut out the dead wood cortar, eliminar o desnecessário, supérfluo. touch/ knock (on) wood bata na madeira (para afugentar a má sorte). wine drawn from the wood vinho da pipa. you cannot see the wood for the trees você está tão envolvido com os detalhes que perdeu de vista o todo. -
82 woody
1) (covered with trees: woody countryside.) arborizado2) ((of a smell etc) of or like wood.) a/de madeira* * *wood.y[w'udi] adj 1 arborizado, coberto de árvores, boscoso. 2 consistente de mato ou floresta. 3 de ou semelhante a madeira, lenhoso. -
83 -smelling
(having a (particular kind of) smell: a nasty-smelling liquid; sweet-smelling roses.) (bem/mal) cheiroso -
84 appetising
adjective (which increases the appetite: an appetizing smell.) apetitoso -
85 carbon monoxide
(a colourless, very poisonous gas which has no smell: Carbon monoxide is given off by car engines.) monóxido de carbono -
86 give away
1) (to give etc (something) to someone (eg because one no longer wants it): I'm going to give all my money away.) desfazer-se de2) (to cause or allow (information etc) to become known usually accidentally: He gave away our hiding-place (noun give-away: the lingering smell was a give-away).) indicar -
87 joss stick
['‹osstik](a stick of incense used eg to give a sweet smell to a room.) pau de incenso -
88 put off
1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) desligar2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) atrasar3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) cancelar4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) (fazer) aborrecer -
89 sniff out
(to discover or detect (by using the sense of smell): The police used dogs to sniff out the explosives.) farejar -
90 -smelling
(having a (particular kind of) smell: a nasty-smelling liquid; sweet-smelling roses.) -
91 appetising
adjective (which increases the appetite: an appetizing smell.) apetitoso -
92 appetizing
adjective (which increases the appetite: an appetizing smell.) apetitoso -
93 aroma
[ə'rəumə](the (usually pleasant) smell that a substance has or gives off: the aroma of coffee.) aroma- aromatic -
94 associate
1. [ə'səusieit] verb1) (to connect in the mind: He always associated the smell of tobacco with his father.) associar2) ((usually with with) to join (with someone) in friendship or work: They don't usually associate (with each other) after office hours.) relacionar-se2. [-et] adjective1) (having a lower position or rank: an associate professor.) adjunto2) (joined or connected: associate organizations.) associado3. noun(a colleague or partner; a companion.) colega- in association with -
95 carbon monoxide
(a colourless, very poisonous gas which has no smell: Carbon monoxide is given off by car engines.) monóxido de carbono -
96 chlorine
['klo:ri:n](an element, a yellowish-green gas with a suffocating smell, used as a disinfectant etc: They put too much chlorine in the swimming-pool.) cloro -
97 detect
[di'tekt](to notice or discover: She thought she could detect a smell of gas.) detectar- detention -
98 disgust
1. verb(to cause feelings of dislike or sickness in: The smell of that soup disgusts me; She was disgusted by your behaviour.) repugnar, enojar2. noun(the state or feeling of being disgusted: She left the room in disgust.) repugnância, repulsa- disgustingly -
99 disgusting
adjective What a disgusting smell!; Her house is in a disgusting mess.) repugnante, nojento -
100 emit
[i'mit]past tense, past participle - emitted; verb(to give out (light, heat, a sound, a smell etc).) emitir, emanar- emission
См. также в других словарях:
smell — smell,[/p] scent, odor, aroma all denote a property of a thing that makes it perceptible to the olfactory sense. Smell not only is the most general of these terms but tends to be the most colorless. It is the appropriate word when merely the… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Smell — (sm[e^]l), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Smelled}, {Smelt}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Smelling}.] [OE. smellen, smillen, smullen; cf. LG. smellen, smelen, sm[ o]len, schmelen, to smoke, to reek, D. smeulen to smolder, and E. smolder. Cf. {Smell}, n.] 1. To… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
smell — [smel] vt. smelled or [Chiefly Brit.] Brit. smelt, smelling [ME smellen < OE * smyllan < IE base * smel , to burn slowly > SMOLDER: basic sense “to give off smoke”] 1. to be or become aware of by means of the nose and the olfactory… … English World dictionary
smell — smell; smell·able; smell·age; smell·er; smell·ful; smell·fun·gus; smell·ie; smell·i·ness; … English syllables
Smell — Smell, n. [OE. smel, smil, smul, smeol. See {Smell}, v. t.] (Physiol.) 1. The sense or faculty by which certain qualities of bodies are perceived through the instrumentally of the olfactory nerves. See {Sense}. [1913 Webster] 2. The quality of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Smell — Smell, v. i. 1. To affect the olfactory nerves; to have an odor or scent; often followed by of; as, to smell of smoke, or of musk. [1913 Webster] 2. To have a particular tincture or smack of any quality; to savor; as, a report smells of calumny.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
smell — verb. The form for the past tense and past participle in BrE is smelled or smelt; in AmE smelled is usually preferred. When the verb is used intransitively, the quality of the smell is normally expressed either by a phrase introduced by of or by… … Modern English usage
smell — (v.) late 12c., emit or perceive an odor, also (n.) odor, aroma, stench; not found in O.E., perhaps cognate with M.Du. smolen, Low Ger. smelen to smolder (see SMOLDER (Cf. smolder)). OED says no doubt of O.E. origin, but not recorded, and not… … Etymology dictionary
smell — [n] odor aroma, bouquet, emanation, essence, flavor, fragrance, incense, perfume, redolence, savor, scent, spice, stench, stink, tang, trace, trail, whiff; concepts 590,599 smell [v1] perceive with the nose breathe, detect, discover, find, get a… … New thesaurus
smell|y — «SMEHL ee», adjective, smell|i|er, smell|i|est. having or giving out a strong or unpleasant smell: »I wonder what makes the sea so smelly. I don t like it (Rudyard Kipling). SYNONYM( … Useful english dictionary
Smell — may refer to:* Olfaction, the sense of smell, the ability of humans and other animals to perceive odors * Odor * In programming, a code smell is a symptom in the source code of a program that something is wrong … Wikipedia